Friends of Nature Sue Developers of Yunnan Hydropower Station

A Beijing-based NGO filed a lawsuit on Friday against the companies responsible for developing a hydropower station near a nature reserve in southwestern China, citing numerous environmental violations. Construction of the Huilong Mountain Hydropower Station, in Yunnan’s verdant Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, commenced in October 2015 and is slated for completion by 2019. But a group called Friends of Nature says the project has destroyed the rain forest, threatens fish, and will submerge part of the Xishuangbanna Nature Reserve. China Resources Power Yunnan Xishuangbanna Co. Ltd., which built the dam, and Kunming Engineering Co. Ltd., which carried out the project’s environmental impact assessment, are named as defendants in the case. Kunming Engineering is administered by the Power Construction Corporation of China, a state-owned Fortune Global 500 company worth $87 billion. “The purpose of the lawsuit is to protect the local rain forest and the fish living in the Luosuo River,” Ge Feng, director of legal and policy affairs at Friends of Nature, told Sixth Tone. The group has asked China Resources to stop cutting down protected plants, rectify the ecological threats posed by the dam, and — along with the engineering company — pay compensation for any environmental costs. According to Friends of Nature’s own investigation, the construction site of the Huilong Mountain Hydropower Station and the land earmarked for its reservoir are full of protected plants with “high ecological value.” Furthermore, the report continues, Kunming Engineering downplayed the project’s ecological damage in its environmental impact assessment, which the provincial-level government reviewed before giving the go-ahead for construction. The environmentalists also note that by cutting off the Luosuo River — one of the region’s last undisrupted migration passages — fish will have no way to get to and from the lower reaches of the Lancang River, China’s name for the Mekong. An official at Xishuangbanna’s development and reform commission told The Paper, Sixth Tone’s sister publication, in January that the local government has high hopes for the dam, which it believes has the potential to irrigate fields, draw tourists, and alleviate poverty. Hydropower has been recognized as a promising new energy source and economic engine for Yunnan province, which is relatively poor, and for southwestern China in general. However, the region’s rapid development of hydropower stations has led to a “severe electricity glut” since 2012, according to a 2016 report by an engineer at state-owned Yunnan Power Grid, which oversees the distribution of electricity throughout the province. Citing environmental concerns and the power surplus, Yunnan in July 2016 banned new hydropower plants with installed capacities below 250,000 kilowatts — 90 times smaller than the Three Gorges Dam, for comparison. But the Huilong Mountain station, which has a planned capacity of 113,000 kilowatts, was not called off because it had been approved before the ban, local officials told The Paper. The Huilong Mountain dam first entered the national spotlight in November 2017, when it released a deluge of water after days of heavy rain filled its reservoir to the brim. The discharge flooded the area downriver for miles, though media reports of the consequences were scant. Friends of Nature has filed some 35 environmental protection lawsuits, according to Ge. In August 2017, the NGO sued the developers of a dam on the Red River, also in Yunnan, on the grounds that it threatened endangered pheasants. Win or lose, Ge believes such legal action is an important part of China’s system of checks and balances against corporations and the government. “Public interest lawsuits,” she said, “are one of the most effective resources we have for pushing back against environmental misconduct.”